Tag Archives: transitions

Changing Days by Sara Honda

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Sara Honda works at the University of Colorado Denver.  In her free time, she loves mentoring teenage girls, exploring the beautiful sunny state of Colorado, and watching Survivor. She secretly loves professional golf, hates onions and Crocs with a passion, and wishes she was a hip hop dancer.

 

“How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.”
― Annie Dillard

 

A few months ago, a good friend shared this quote with me.  At first, the quote made me uneasy.  I could see the truth of it, and that’s what hit me.  There are a lot of my days that feel routine, that feel mundane.  Do I really want my life to reflect the hours I spend riding the train to work every week?  That makes me seem too ordinary.  Or the hours I spend sitting in front of a computer each day?  I’m not exactly saving starving children.  What about all those nights I go to bed before 10pm? Does that make me lame?  (I swear I’m cool, people.  I just like my sleep!)

 

The more I thought about the quote, the more I began to welcome Dillard’s idea as an invitation rather than a conviction.  What if we treated every day and every decision, little or big, relevant or not, as though it really mattered?  Not with the pressure that everything is make-or-break, but that the decisions we make will, over time, tell a story of who we are.  What we buy/say/do/read/think are indicators of our values.

 

Our childhood and young adult years are marked by milestones: sweet-16, first car, first kiss, graduation, college, and first job.  Many of my friends are encountering adult milestones: engagement, graduate school, marriage, babies, and travel.  But I’ve been without any significant cliché life-changing milestones for a few years now.  I had become a full-grown adult, and yet for a long time I was waiting for something else to make me feel like I’d reached adulthood.  Would the perfect job do it?  Maybe I wouldn’t feel like an adult until I was married, or at the very least in a serious and committed relationship.  Does it happen when you have a baby?  Perhaps if I lived on my own (which I am currently doing, and yet I still feel like a kid)? 

 

I am sure the fact that I sometimes like coloring in coloring books and watching Harry Potter movies has nothing to do with it, nor the fact that I still don’t know how to order an alcoholic drink.  “I’ll take one of those alcohol-thingys.  Um, the wet kind.  Do you have anything pink?”

 

Over time, I have come to appreciate (with much prodding from God) that my life has already started, and that the seemingly-mundane decisions I make today are in fact  meaningful.  It’s hard to pinpoint a particular moment over the past few years that significantly changed me, but somehow I’ve evolved.  It has been nearly three years since I graduated from college, and in that time I’ve gained confidence, new lifelong friendships, a deeper understanding of God’s presence in my life, and assurance of the ways God has called me to minister to others. 

 

As we get to know ourselves better (and I truly believe this process lasts until the day we die), we are able to recognize when we are not growing.  For me, I begin to feel frustrated and ask that ever-present “Why am I here?”  It spurs me to get to know someone new, get plugged in to a new group, or take on different responsibilities at work.

Change in my life is not marked by milestone moments, but by the little decisions I make every day that dictate who I am, and who God is shaping me to be.  Change is gradual, fluid, and welcome.  I know there are still milestone moments to come (good and bad), but I have come to the understanding that these are just another part of the long and constant growth known as my life.  God has promised us that a life lived for him will be meaningful and worth living.  That has been my journey; appreciating consistency and recognizing that sometimes growth is gradual and occurs without my immediate knowledge.  I hope that if your story is similar to mine,  you can recognize growth in your life, and that if you do experience change on a more significant level, you can still recognize the change that happens in the quiet lulls in between. 

Letting Go by Sarah Scheidler

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Sarah loves all things organic… Her soul is fed by a good challenge, coffee & old dusty stuff with potential. She meddles in all things artistic… but adores photographing people (you can find her work here)… She is a mother x 3 and a wife to a wonderfully creative type. Former avid blogger… gone hotwheels racer and baby chaser…

 

Growth in Change: Letting Go

It was slow as molasses…yes in January…  A change that came out of nowhere and yet… over much time and many discussions, in retrospect, my husband and I should of known what was coming…

God wanted to do something different than we had planned… Damn. It. All.

I am not a risk taker by nature. I am loyal, responsible & calculated and I married a man who is equally conscious, reliable and planned. Together for nearly 8 years we lived together happily buying and selling homes, living within our means, wanting for nothing, sharing and enjoying all that we had, the best we knew how…  It was a good life.

We remodeled our craftsman house (read: 2200 sq ft beauty with 3 car garage) in Pasadena, Ca… and as we moved back in… in to a much larger, better planned out space… I kept finding myself wanting to purge… and purge more of the things we did not use regularly… I didn’t really think much of it as it happened but gradually it became obvious… we had plenty of space to store things… and few things to store…

A few months later, during my husbands sabbatical from pastoral work, my sweet but entirely burned out husband, and I began to do some soul searching… and real questioning… you know the kind that starts with “Do I really have a need for 15 pairs of jeans?” and moves to “How can I be a good steward of  today, Lord?” and “God how can you heal my soul?” and “What do we really value & desire?” and maybe even “God help us to dream..” … My husband also took a motorcycle training class… we tried to connect with others… but made very few connections, after many attempts…

In this space there was much hurt, more loneliness and layers and layers of disappointment in people who were called to care for others, but did not care for me…

So we prayed. And prayed. And at the end of my husband’s sabbatical we agreed that we needed to begin a conversation with the church about what we believed God had done and was doing… Quite honestly, he wasn’t sure exactly WHAT God was calling us to but he was pretty certain it was NOT his current position/job…

I remember sitting in the living room of our lovely craftsman home…  sharing tears… realizing we were going to have to move… away from our neighbors… 8 months pregnant with our third munchkin…  and down size our living space, significantly…

The purging I had started a few months prior to this was nothing compared to this mass purge, lots of tears, putting our craftsman up for rent, saying bittersweet goodbyes to our church family of 10+ years and the hope that God knew what He was doing even if we had only a glimpse. I revisited our finances a few (million) times, we met with wise folks to make sure we weren’t overlooking something… I researched places to live… From Portland, OR and the greater Los Angeles area… We searched for housing and jobs…

God was calling us to something new… something unknown… something ridiculous really… something creative…

 

We trusted and we leaped.

 

Exactly one year later, we have found ourselves surrounded by an amazing community. Literally. Surrounded. Our church community lives sprinkled among the streets surrounding our sweet little postage stamp sized rental home.  There there are people who live what they believe… humbly and intentionally… and it heals our souls… It heals me to walk down an unmarked alley to even more nondescript doors… down stairs into a basement to meet for church… in a place where my children, who may be found brake dancing in the back during worship, are joyfully greeted… It heals me to have ladies that will let me contribute to their lives… if even by a grocery run… It heals me to be invited to showers (baby & wedding) where guests are welcome with or without a gift… welcome even without knowing the one celebrated.

Tim is slowly, but surely, pursuing his own creative journey…  I continue to search for time (& literally space) to carve out for my love of all things creative… and/or growing… my children included…

Our little family has LOVED learning to love being together so much, so closely.  The boys have learned the neighbors have a small farm, clubhouse and trampoline.  Tim’s appreciation for the little things like a good cup of coffee has grown. I have learned to shop for less, less often.

Shortly after we moved into our little place, I remember saying to a new friend “We are exactly where God wants us”… but it stung quite a bit… I welled up with tears often when speaking of where we came… how we came… where we are. Even now, some days I daydream and wonder if one day we will suddenly find ourselves in our former life… With the big house… enormous yard…  our own master suite… a custom made place for everything and then I remember.

 

I am EXACTLY where God would have me… and I. Love. It. Right. Where. I. Am.

 

 

 

Diligence of Lace by Carissa Burkett

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Carissa is a woman who creates.  She recently left a designer job at Anthropology and is currently creating a new life for herself as a grad student in an amazing master’s program.  She has created many things in her life with her hands, but most of all they come from her experience of the world.  Here is one example:

 

While in San Francisco I went into a Café and saw a woman sitting by herself eating lunch.  I asked her if I could sit with her while I drank my Latte and she nodded her agreement.  I began talking with her about uninteresting things and she slowly began to warm up to the conversation.  She was a dentist whose practice was currently in Washington DC and was attending a dental conference in San Francisco.  She was born and raised in Columbia in the mountains and had worked very hard to come to the US for college and dental school.  She talked to me about the transition of moving from beautiful Columbia and all of her family to New Orleans for dental school.  She told me how she hated the humidity that made her hair frizzy and how difficult it was to be away from her family and all that she had known.  She told me how hard she had to work to accomplish the achievements that she had today.  This very strong woman had the outer appearance of delicacy and beauty, while she had had to climb many difficult steps to get from her meager but proud beginnings to her current wealth of accomplishments and success.

In response to this interaction, I crocheted these tubular pieces out of dental floss and installed them in my senior art show at Azusa Pacific University in 2008.  If any of you have ever crocheted or watched someone crochet, you know that crocheting is a repetitious practice in which you take a single small movement and do it over and over and over again, and somehow those little loops grow into something large and beautiful.  Often times change is the same.  You have to take tiny little steps, and keep putting one foot in front of the other and in the end you can look back at all those tiny little steps and find that something beautiful has been created through the trials of change.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Controlling Growth by Melanie Dosen

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Melanie, (and for some reason, I cannot upload picture of her today), is a people person.  If you were to see said picture(s) of her she would be surrounded by people – people who call her a dear friend, people she is laughing with, dancing with, chatting with.  What is evident is that she cares about these people and what you can’t see is how big her heart is – for the world and for her community.  She currently works giving care and attention to autistic children and will shortly be going back to school to get her Masters in Social Work so she can provide better care and education to herself and others. 

Melanie is starting us off with our new spring prompt GROWTH IN CHANGE.  She read this at the open mic night and I felt it needed be shared with more people.  Thank you Melanie!

 

I am not a patient person.

I find slowness absurd, expecting sufferable, and waiting intolerable. I must be moving, I must be doing, I must be accomplishing; I reject the notion that things might not, cannot, or will not happen, so I take it on myself to facilitate that “happening”.

I am not patient, I do not know how to just be; I do not know how to trust my muscles and joints to gravity and allow my body to gently sit, letting my mouth and nostrils expand and suck in this miraculously available oxygen.  To allow it to permeate my bloodstream, voyaging through my veins, delivering fuel and life to my organs, which all labor together symbiotically to ensure that I remain a healthy, functioning being.  I do not know how to be patient and let my body do what it innately does, what, in some sort of holy inspiration, it was designed to do.  Do, and do well, do absolutely perfectly (most of the time) completely without my assistance.

I am impatient, because I am terrified of things “not happening” when I am doing nothing to make them happen; despite of the fact that my body, my land, my world, everything manages to not just exist, but thrive without me.  My impatience induces a habit of creating needlessness: my unhealthy habits, my unnecessary exertion, my controlling mentalities, my impatience over the fact that things aren’t going my way, my capacity to criticize and ostracize, my ridiculous dependence on things.  Needlessness is my constant companion in this dark cavity in which I am comfortable to nestle, incapable—or, perhaps just refusing—to accept that this existence I’ve enjoyed is not contingent on myself.  Refusing to accept that I have no control.

The realization of this horrid reality instigates all sorts of different reactions: some find this emancipation from control quite comforting, embracing their relinquished responsibilities from life’s supposed burdens like a warm blanket, happy to dwell in the surrounding nothingness.  Others, however, find themselves in a panic, their wholly control-less nature an empty and suffocating void, an intolerable vacancy.

So, like me, they’ve fabricated a world where they do have control by making themselves dependant on needlessness. They, like me, refuse to believe that we have everything we need, and that we’ve already been given everything that matters, and that our bodies and our plants and our ecosystems know what they are doing.  Fancying ourselves to be the wisest, strongest, and cleverest, we instate dominion over the things of the earth that do not defend themselves against our impertinence, perhaps, because, unlike us, they are confident that they have nothing to prove.

These things are used to create more things to feed our needlessness, leaving places barren in our wake.  Our ethic is consumption, and we have been conditioned to earn livings to purchase lifestyles.  We perpetuate a cycle of acquisition and waste, removing from earth and our bodies the very elements that make them function and thrive. We exploit what’s good so that we can prove to our terrified selves that we are in control.

What if we were bold enough to return our illegitimate control?  What if we were confident enough to live as though we aren’t needed, but have in fact been given everything as a gift to enjoy?  What if we listened to our bodies and our earth, and vowed to only give it good things?  What if we made a covenant with ourselves and our land and our neighbors to re-learn how to be producers, rather than consumers?  By renouncing our control that we have illicitly usurped, we actually become the wisest, the strongest, and the cleverest; by acknowledging that we have very little to do with the perpetuation of existence, we become freer beings, unrestrained by a lifestyle of needlessness.  Instead, we become open to living a lifestyle that can meet real needs, a lifestyle centered on enacting justice, embracing mercy, and living in humble wonderment of to Whom we can attribute all of this beauty.  A lifestyle that honors life, rather than trembles in fear of death.

I want to be brave enough to relinquish my control and regain my patience.  I want to learn to lay down on the grass in peace, trusting my body and the earth that supports it.  I want to embrace the radical assumption that I don’t need the needlessness, because I am actually not needed, though deeply, deeply wanted.  Come, dive into this great warm abyss with me; let’s be courageous enough to surrender our control.

Hope in Letting Go by Amy Vogt

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope

Amy, her husband Danny and their soon to be three kids live in snowy Colorado. Most days she is a wife, mom, neighbor and friend who values genuine relationships, pursuing the extraordinary in the ordinary, and most carbohydrates. Amy desires to make life memorable, and loves to capture moments from behind a lens, namely her 50mm. She shares more of her family’s story on her blog.

 

 

I am proud to claim my oldest child title. Of course I am, right? My love affair with being bossy started at a young age and peaked in marriage…I mean motherhood… Okay, I’m working on the bossy thing. I am motivated, action oriented, relational, type A, mostly responsible, and many of the other things that you probably associate with oldest children. If I’m honest, I am also, at times, too goal oriented, controlling, self-absorbed, and particularly self-dependent.

Perhaps a more interesting fact is that I am also married to an oldest child, and for 2 years we only had one child, a boy, who by default was also an oldest. As you might imagine, the battles of will in our home are fierce! Thankfully, our baby girl arrived soon enough to add a little grace and balance to our mix. God, protect her!

I am blessed with two beautiful children and one on the way. I have experienced success in the workplace. My husband walks with God, has an amazing job, the highest level of integrity, and a passionate devotion to our family. I am not going to lie and say that we have not spent many hours over the years working to shape our vision for where we want to be, creating a path of how we think we can get there, and then working our tails off to make sure that we did. We are driven by nature – go-getters from birth.

Oh, Lord, give me faith to trust you more.

I am challenged daily to fully grasp how to function as my driven, make-it-happen self while serving a God who desperately wants to direct my destiny toward His standard of success and perfection.  I am pulled by a world that woos me to create my own future in a country and era where success and happiness seem dangerously within my reach.

While my opportunities to pursue joy and satisfaction on my own terms are seemingly endless and astoundingly tempting, it is my experience that my greatest hope and ultimately my greatest contentment comes in my release of control and usually from the greatest depths.

Someday, Lord, may I be strong enough to relinquish control on my own. For now, thank you for taking it from me at just the right times.

Not even three months ago, our driven spirits were quieted as we watched the projection of our precious, unborn baby girl dancing around on a screen during an ultrasound. Her amazing life was on display giving us joy and confirming a fear. Our baby girl will be born with a bilateral cleft lip and palate. And amidst our joy, tears streamed down our faces, and my belly shook as I cried a violent, silent cry. We clearly saw, for the first time, the deep grooves in her lip and palate. And, while there was so much to be grateful for, even in that moment, we eventually let ourselves succumb to the despair.

We had lost control.

Over the next few weeks we mourned the loss of a low-risk pregnancy, the addition of the many surgeries that lay ahead for our baby, all of the doctor appointments we would be scheduling, and the medical decisions we would make, the challenges our family will face as we welcome our precious daughter and sister into our lives.

The grief I have felt for my child is so much deeper than grief I have ever felt for myself. But, more importantly, I can now say that my hope for this baby is exponentially larger than my grief. Hope has a way of growing from dark places, and I have to release control to gain a grasp of it. Hope grows, and then comes the joy, contentment, and peace. I don’t believe I could have planned it this way.

Father, I praise you for you are all-knowing.

In a cathartic twist of fate I am reminded that my ways of planning, striving, and directing my life seemingly limit my ability to have the deepest, most true hope – a hope that is rooted in faith and trust in God instead of myself. I can only get myself so far. And, thank God, because I’m pretty sure that the places I want to be headed, the places I want my baby girl, children, and family to be headed, are places that are much better than what I can meagerly conjure up on my own.

I am driven, but my God is mighty.

Baby girl is due in April, and it feels so close and so far away. I know that things will be challenging, and I am sure that our planning, driven, controlling natures will be ever emergent. But, in my heart is a prayer of surrender; my spirit is filled with hope and peace.

 

Providing Hope by Katey Cabrera

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope

Katey Cabrera is one of those individuals that you want to know.  Her caring spirit and hospitality seep into everything she does whether it is a walk through the neighborhood, hosting an event, or caring for her family.  She is also an amazing voice and artist in her community. 

 

Creativity is something that runs deep within my bones; and has since I was a small child.  About 3 years ago I started a new job, which consisted of sitting behind a desk, under florescent lights, in a cubicle, and speaking with people who were out of work due to sickness or injury.  It was a great job that I was very thankful for.  At times it was a depressing job.  I felt as if the florescent lights were sucking any ounce of creativity out of me each day.

 

My husband was constantly encouraging me to paint by trying to use reverse psychology on me by telling me, “I bet you cannot paint any more.”  Knowing my husband I knew he was not trying to be mean in saying this but wanted me to paint so badly that he would try anything that might work.  He was hurt that I was not using my gifts and talents. He bought supplies for me.  He told me he would create a space for me to paint.  He suggested books that I should read about finding time and space for creativity. I had a hard time explaining, and he had a hard time understanding, that I felt as if all creativity had been sucked out of me and that by the time I left in the morning for work, drove in traffic for at least 30 minutes, worked a full day, drove back in traffic for at least 30 minutes, exercised to calm my mind down, and ate dinner, the last thing I wanted to do was pull out my art supplies to paint and make a mess.

 

Around this time, not only had I started a new job, I was also training for a 39 mile Breast Cancer Walk, I experienced a death in the family, I was trying to keep up my relationships with my husband and friends, and my husband and I decided to start trying to get pregnant.  I was very overwhelmed to say the least.  I expressed, to my husband, the need for a break and a break is what I got.  I came down with shingles.  At the time I thought shingles was only something that affected older people. I was proven wrong as I got this disease at the age of 27.  I also learned that shingles is contagious to those who have not had the chicken pox before.  Because of this I was taken out of work until my body had rid itself of the shingles sores.  I got the break I had been hoping for.

 

During this time off of work I spent most of my time outside in the sunshine.  I felt the creativity returning to my bones and I decided to paint.  Without thinking twice about it I decided to paint something for my husband to show him I could still paint and to thank him for always encouraging me to paint.  I painted a portrait of Abraham Lincoln, his favorite historical figure.

 

Having a break from the busyness of life gave me hope that I did still possess creativity, could still find rest, and could still be comfortable and calm in the stillness of life that surrounded me if I found time for it to.

 

Whenever I walk by the painting of Lincoln I am reminded of hope found in memories, of hope found in encouragement, of hope found in stillness, of hope found in looking, of hope found in waiting, of hope found in the here and now, of the hope that God provides in His timing.